OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
TV show American Ride unloads and heads to Springer’s Point in May for filming. Photos by C. Leinbach
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Historian Kevin Duffus relates the Blackbeard story he’s uncovered to Stan Ellsworth, host of the show.
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Filming the segment.
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Former history teacher Stan Ellsworth of the BYU-TV show “American Ride” at Springer’s Point.

Editor’s Note: BYU-TV show “American Ride” was on Ocracoke in May filming Kevin Duffus, N.C. historian of the year, relating the “real” story of Blackbeard the pirate. The Observer accompanied Stan Ellsworth, host of the show, and got a story and photos. The show, titled “Legends and Legacy: American Pirates,” also features Capt. Horatio Sinbad, who also participated in the recent Blackbeard’s Pirate Jamboree Oct. 31 to Nov. 2.

The show promo blurb: “Discover the reality of the American pirate. Were they profiteers, privateers, or patriots? Learn the truth about the notorious Blackbeard, and meet a man who lives the modern day legacy, Captain Horatio Sinbad.”

It was recently broadcast nationally and is now available for viewing online at:

http://www.byutv.org/watch/a972c62f-d1b3-4794-b863-c5a61ccebcca/american-ride-legends-and-legacy-american-pirates

By Connie Leinbach

An unlikely ambassador of scholarship, Stan Ellsworth is a biker on a Harley Davidson dispensing American history lessons on his television show “American Ride.”

Ellsworth, whose show is on the BYU television network, was on Ocracoke May 7 to film a segment about Blackbeard and his connection to Ocracoke.

“A lot of folks don’t know what the stories are and the truth about history,” he said between takes at Springer’s Point with historian-author Kevin Duffus. “We need to remember the stories that bind and unite us. We are forgetting them.”

The show’s slogan is “rediscover American history,” and his shows look at unusual segments of American history, such as Duffus’s new theories on Blackbeard, or the U-boat brigade off of the Outer Banks in 1942 that’s not usually covered in high school history.

Attired in typical biker fashion—a black bandana covering long blond locks, black gloves, a black shirt under a blue jean jacket adorned with Harley pins–Ellsworth is warm and convivial.

“He’s a larger-than-life personality,” said production manager Brooke Redmon, of Vineyard Productions, the company hired to produce the shows.

Ellsworth and his crew traveled from Salt Lake City, Utah, to the East where Ocracoke was one of several stops this summer.   The show airs Mondays at 9 p.m., and they can be viewed online at http://www.byutv.org/American ride.

In the current season, season six, the show is focusing on how the clouds of war gathered to lead America into WWII.  Duffus, who is based in Raleigh, is featured in the current segment about the war activities off the Outer Banks.

“The network just aired an episode that featured me talking about WWII and U-boats that was filmed exactly a year ago on Hatteras Island,” said Duffus, who is the author, among other books, of “War Zone: World War II off the North Carolina Coast.”

That segment is titled “Wolf Pack: the Shadow of War.”  In it, Ellsworth talks about the cadre of German U-boats off the coast, German spies on American soil and more.  His delivery is lively, and the production mixes footage of him on his bike visiting the Outer Banks and the National World War II Museum in New Orleans.

But now, the group is filming segments for season seven which will air next year. The day before, the group was in Beaufort for that part of the Blackbeard story.

A former high school history teacher and college football coach, Ellsworth said he got into the entertainment business when a friend coaxed him into appearing in a movie.

“My friend needed someone to play a mean coach,” Ellsworth said.  “I quickly decided I wasn’t competing with Brad Pitt.”

Although Ellsworth now lives in Utah, he grew up in Manassas, Va.

“I’m related to every Lee that ever walked in Virginia,” he said.  No stranger to the Outer Banks, he said he spent summers here.

“The last time I was in Ocracoke was in ’78,” he said. “A lot has changed since then.”

The group has covered history in most all of the United States.  After Ocracoke, the group is headed to Pennsylvania to Pennsylvania Dutch country, Philadelphia and Boston.

Ellsworth has been riding Harleys since he was 12, and rides a top-of-the-line vehicle–a 2014 custom Road King, supplied by Harley Davidson, his sponsor.

Before the ferry left to take them back to Beaufort, the crew filmed Ellsworth riding through the village.

“I live everywhere I go,” he said.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Ellsworth on his Harley before his scud around the island.
Previous articleAnother unattended boat unmoors in Silver Lake Harbor
Next articleRemembering dedicated island vet Jane Rowley